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Between 2009 and 2020, Josh published more than 10,000 blog posts. Here, you can access his blog archives.

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Acting Solicitor General- Hiring Law clerks is like hiring Starbucks baristas…

October 5th, 2010

Update: Thanks for the link AboveTheLaw. FYI, the October 2010 season of FantasySCOTUS.net, the Internet’s Premier Supreme Court Fantasy League is live. Check it out!

During oral arguments in NASA v. Nelson, Acting-SG Katyal had this to say about asking open-ended questions during the application process:

I think as Judge Kleinfeld said, that’s how law clerks are hired. That’s how barristas at Starbucks are hired. You have to ask these open-ended questions because as an employer, you don’t really know what–where the pressure points or danger spots in an individual application are.

Lol

A glimpse into Chief Justice Roberts’s views on health care in NASA v. Nelson?

October 5th, 2010

Probably not. But this is interesting nonetheless.

During oral arguments in NASA v. Nelson, Roberts asked whether the government could inquire about a person’s dietary habits on an employment background check:

Your diet, right? That’s certainly relevant in the employment, context, right? They are going to have to pay for your healthcare, worry you might miss things, miss days of work.”

This reasoning–that the government should have an interest to inquire into an employee’s diet because the government pays for healthcare–seems to allude to one of the issues lurking in the individual mandate debate.

I’m sure the issue has crossed the Chief’s mind.

President Reagan often joked that the most terrifying words in the English language are: ‘I’m from the government and I’m here to help.”

Roberts paraphrased his old boss’s classic line:

“…whenever the government comes and says, ‘this is for your own good,’ you have to be … a little suspicious.”

NASA v. Nelson – Justice Scalia Likes Substantive Due Process for Guns, not for Informational Privacy

October 5th, 2010

Last term in McDonald v. Chicago, Justice Scalia was willing to buy into substantive due process to protect the right to keep and bear arms. In McDonald, he wrote:

Despite my misgivings about Substantive Due Process as an original matter, I have acquiesced in the Court’s incorpora- tion of certain guarantees in the Bill of Rights ‘‘because it is both long established and narrowly limited.’’ Albright v. Oli- ver, 510 U.S. 266, 275 (1994) (SCALIA, J., concurring). This case does not require me to reconsider that view, since straightforward application of settled doctrine suffices to decide it.89

Based on oral arguments today in NASA v. Nelson, it would seem that he has once again shunned substantive due process as ‘‘babble,’’ ‘‘usurpation,’’ and even an ‘‘atrocity,’’

JUSTICE SCALIA: Mr. Stormer, what provision of the Constitution are you relying — I looked at your table of authorities in your brief, and you have cases listed, you have statutes listed; there is not a single citation anywhere in your brief to a provision of the Constitution. What provision of the Constitution are you relying on.

MR. STORMER: It would mostly fall —

JUSTICE SCALIA: I think it’s a very nice thing that the Government shouldn’t ask intrusive questions. I also think that it’s a nice thing that the 6 Government should pay a living wage to its employees, 7 but I don’t feel authorized to go around saying how much 8 the Government should pay each of its employees because 9 there is nothing in the Constitution about that, and the 10 question is left to Congress. 11 What do you rely on in the Constitution that 12 enables me to decide how much intrusiveness is too much, 13 rather than leaving that to Congress?

MR. STORMER: It would flow from the ordered 15 concept of the liberty component of the Fifth Amendment, as well as the First —

JUSTICE SCALIA: The Fifth Amendment, okay. Which says no person shall be deprived of what?

19 MR. STORMER: Of life — I mean, no person 20 shall be deprived of due process of law, and then the 21 last — 22 23 24 the ordered 25

JUSTICE SCALIA: Due process of law.

MR. STORMER: — refers to the concept of, concept of liberty.

JUSTICE SCALIA: All right. That — that’s what I thought. You are talking about substantive due 2 process here. 3

MR. STORMER: Well, the Whalen case, the 4 Nixon case, and to some extent, the Reporters Committee 5 case refer to this concept of privacy. And they are, in 6 fact, vague, but they do talk about the concept of 7 privacy as being the right to control information about 8 oneself.

9 And — and both — and all of the —

10 JUSTICE SCALIA: I mean, I like that, but I 11 just don’t see it anywhere in the Constitution. That’s 12 all I’m taking about. 13

MR. STORMER: Well, I — there — those 14 cases, in fact, do not refer to a term called 15 “informational privacy.” Those terms have grown from 16 the various cases that have flown — flowed from the 17 determinations in Whalen and Nixon and, to some extent, 18 Reporters Committee.

Granted, the Second Amendment is enumerated in the Constitution, while the nebulous notion fo informational privacy is not. However, Scalia still had to rely on an expansive notion of “liberty” to find that Chicago could not enact their gun control ordinance.

Uzbekistan Ministry of Propaganda Commissioned “Documentary” To Portray Kazakhstan In False Light

October 4th, 2010

Don’t believe these lies! Jagshemash!

Update: Justice Kagan is *not* wearing a Neck Doily

October 4th, 2010

Although Justice Kagan wore a neck doily during her investiture, she did not wear one during oral arguments.

H/T Art Lien